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Friday, April 2, 2010

US Increasing Military Presence in the Mexican Border

Lawmakers from Arizona and New Mexico are ratcheting up their demands that the Obama administration deploy hundreds of National Guard troops and Border Patrol agents to the Mexican border after the killing of a prominent southeast Arizona rancher.

Local police say Robert Krentz, 58, whose body was found slumped over his ATV on his ranch Saturday, was probably shot to death by an illegal immigrant. Footprints from the scene of the crime led back across the Mexican border.

In the wake of the shooting, state and federal lawmakers have called on the Department of Homeland Security and the Pentagon to revive stalled plans to beef up border security and protect the people who live near notorious drug-running routes.

"The federal government must do all it can within its power to curb this violence and protect its citizens from criminals coming across the border from Mexico," Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., said in a letter to Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano.

McCain called on the administration to "immediately" reconsider sending National Guard troops to the border. "We must make the security of our borders one of our top national security priorities," he said.

Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer also renewed her calls for additional National Guard troops, calling the Krentz killing a "horrible and unnecessary tragedy."

That demand came on top of a request from three members of New Mexico's congressional delegation for more Border Patrol agents in the Boot Heel of the state, and a tough call from former Colorado Rep. Tom Tancredo for the National Guard to be sent in.

Tancredo, in a statement through his Rocky Mountain Foundation, said the National Guard should be sent in to aid the Border Patrol. He decried the Obama administration for not completing border fencing along the area near where Krentz was killed, and he said Napolitano's claim that the border is secure is a "lie."

"The residents here know better," Tancredo said.

Krentz's family has been ranching in southern Arizona since 1907, and Robert was known for his generosity -- bringing water to illegal immigrants and helping those who were injured while trying to cross the desert.

The family, though, had repeatedly expressed their concern to authorities that illegal immigrants were damaging their property and disturbing, even killing, their livestock.

Robert's wife Susan wrote to Congress in 2007 saying their ranch had suffered $6.2 million in damage "because of illegal foot traffic."

"We are in fear for our lives and safety and health of ourselves and that of our families and friends," she wrote.

Rep. Gabrielle Giffords, D-Ariz., also said in a written statement Sunday that "all options should be on the table" after the shooting, including the possibility of sending more Border Patrol agents and deploying the National Guard.

The Obama administration last summer had been considering a plan to send up to 1,500 National Guard volunteers to the southern border to help with the counter-drug effort, but that was stalled over disagreements about funding and other issues.

Richardson orders National Guard to the border

Governor Bill Richardson on Wednesday ordered New Mexico National Guard members to patrol the U.S.-Mexico border in response to a killing of an Arizona rancher last weekend. The move comes a day after Richardson announced that he ordered more law enforcement to the border area.

“I want residents in Southern New Mexico to know we are taking this border violence very seriously by adding a National Guard presence along with state, local and federal law enforcement patrols along the border,” Richardson said in a statement.

It is unknown how many guardsmen will be sent to the border at this time but a number may be available when the guardsmen are in place at the border.

The guardsmen will work with the New Mexico Department of Homeland Security and Emergency Management, which is coordinating the law enforcement presence along the border.

Arizona rancher Robert Krentz was killed this weekend and some believe it was at the hands of an illegal immigrant. The rancher's death also spurred U.S. Sens. Jeff Bingaman and Tom Udall, along with Rep. Harry Teague, all of New Mexico, to ask the Department of Homeland Security to increase the number of Border Patrol agents in the area and set up a Forward Operating Base in the New Mexico Bootheel.

The deployment in New Mexico comes weeks after Texas Gov. Rick Perry activated the Texas Military Forces OH-58 Kiowa and the UH-72 Lakota helicopters to patrol the border between El Paso and Browns ville.

The Texas deployment is part of the first phase of Perry's classified plan, which he said is necessary to prevent the spillover of drug violence from Mexico. Perry's critics panned the move as nothing more than election-year grandstanding.

Harold Kuenstler, a county commissioner in Hidalgo County in the New Mexico Bootheel, said Richardson's announcement is a good step.

"When the National Guard has gone to the Bootheel, there was a decrease" in trafficking activity, he said. "They have a high presence and visibility, and entries slowed down."

Kuenstler, who ran the Border Patrol's Lordsburg station until retiring in 1997, said he thinks the agency needs to shift how it monitors for undocumented immigrant traffic in rural regions. Now, he said, agents work too far from the border.

"If you wait for them to come 30 miles up, how many ranches have they come through?" he asked. "If you're stationed 10 miles from the border, what about that rancher that has a ranch within 10 miles?"
In 2005, Richardson declared a state of emergency in border areas to provide more law enforcement funding for the border area in New Mexico. In 2006, President George W. Bush ordered national guard troops to the border to stem the flow of immigrants flowing into the United States from the U.S.-Mexico border.

Though Richardson was initially critical of using the National Guard to patrol the border, he has since changed his mind.

1 comment:

Going to get harder to 'do business.'Maybe Cartels will be left to 'smuggle' drugs to their own plazas in Mexico.I don't think that was just a regular illegal immigrant.I think it was a criminal element like a Coyote or drug smuggler.Besides they went back to Mexico.Probably do it all the time.I'm sure that guy will be eniminated by his bosses for screwing things up for all the criminals.Buggs good to see you post.I have only read your posts on forum back when it was started.